This is a frame that I have found useful and I'm sharing in case others find it useful.
EA has arguably gone through several waves:
Waves of EA (highly simplified model — see caveats below) | |||
First wave | Second wave | Third wave | |
Time period | 2010[1]-2017[2] | 2017-2023 | 2023-?? |
Primary constraint | Money | Talent |
??? |
Primary call to action | Donations to effective charities | Career change | |
Primary target audience | Middle-upper-class people | University students and early career professionals | |
Flagship cause area | Global health and development | Longtermism | |
Major hubs | Oxford > SF Bay > Berlin (?) | SF Bay > Oxford > London > DC > Boston |
The boundaries between waves are obviously vague and somewhat arbitrary. This table is also overly simplistic – I first got involved in EA through animal welfare, which is not listed at all on this table, for example. But I think this is a decent first approximation.
It’s not entirely clear to me whether we are actually in a third wave. People often overestimate the extent to which their local circumstances are unique. But there are two main things which make me think that we have a “wave” which is distinct from, say, mid 2022:
- Substantially less money, through a combination of Meta stock falling, FTX collapsing, and general market/crypto downturns[3]
- AI safety becoming (relatively) mainstream
If I had to choose an arbitrary date for the beginning of the third wave, I might choose March 22, 2023, when the FLI open letter on pausing AI experiments was published.
It remains to be seen if public concern about AI is sustained – Superintelligence was endorsed by a bunch of fancy people when it first came out, but they mostly faded away. If it is sustained though, I think EA will be in a qualitatively new regime: one where AI safety worries are common, AI safety is getting a lot of coverage, people with expertise in AI safety might get into important rooms, and where the field might be less neglected.
Third wave EA: what are some possibilities?
Here are a few random ideas; I am not intending to imply that these are the most likely scenarios.
Example future scenario | Politics and Civil Society[4] | Forefront of weirdness | Return to non-AI causes |
Description of the possible “third wave” — chosen to illustrate the breadth of possibilities | There is substantial public appetite to heavily regulate AI. The technical challenges end up being relatively easy. The archetypal EA project is running a grassroots petition for a moratorium on AI. | AI safety becomes mainstream and "spins out" of EA. EA stays at the forefront of weirdness and the people who were previously interested in AI safety turn their focus to digital sentience, acausal moral trade, and other issues that still fall outside the Overton window. | AI safety becomes mainstream and "spins out" of EA. AI safety advocates leave EA, and vibes shift back to “first wave” EA. |
Primary constraint | Political will | Research | Money |
Primary call to action | Voting/advocacy | Research | Donations |
Primary target audience | Voters in US/EU | Future researchers (university students) | Middle-upper class people |
Flagship cause area | AI regulation | Digital sentience | Animal welfare |
Where do we go from here?
- I’m interested in organizing more projects like EA Strategy Fortnight. I don’t feel very confident about what third wave EA should look like, or even that there will be a third wave, but it does seem worth spending time discussing the possibilities.
- I'm particularly interested in claims that there isn't, or shouldn't be, a third wave of EA (i.e. please feel free to disagree with the whole model, argue that we’re still in wave 2, argue we might be moving towards wave 3 but shouldn’t be, etc.).
- I’m also interested in generating cruxes and forecasts about those cruxes. A lot of these are about the counterfactual value of EA, e.g. will digital sentience become “a thing” without EA involvement?
This post is part of EA Strategy Fortnight. You can see other Strategy Fortnight posts here.
Thanks to a bunch of people for comments on earlier drafts, including ~half of my coworkers at CEA, particularly Lizka. “Waves” terminology stolen from feminism, and the idea that EA has been through waves and is entering a third wave is adapted from Will MacAskill, though I think he has a slightly different framing, but he still deserves a lot of the credit here.
- ^
Starting date is somewhat arbitrarily chosen from the history listed here.
- ^
Arbitrarily choosing the coining of the word “longtermism” as the starting event of the second wave
- ^
Although Meta stock is back up since I first wrote this; I would be appreciative if someone could do an update on EA funding
- ^
Analogy from Will MacAskill: Quakers:EA::Abolition:AI Safety
Yes I appreciate very much what you're saying, I'm learning much from this dialogue. I think what I said that didn't communicate well to you and Brad West isn't some kind of comparison of utilitarianism and communist thought...but rather how people defend their ideal when it's failing, whatever it is...religion, etc. that, "They're not doing it right"..."If you did it right (as I see it) then it would produce much better stuff".
EA is uniquely bereft of art in comparison to all other categories of human endeavor: education, business, big tech, military, healthcare, social society, etc. So for EA there's been ten years of incredible activity and massive funding, but no art in sight...so whatever is causing that is a bug and not a feature. Maybe my thesis that utilitarianism is the culprit is wrong. I'd be happy to abandon that thesis if I could find a better one.
But given that EA "attracts, creates and retains consequentialists" as you say, and that they are hopefully not the bad kind that doesn't work (naive) but the good kind that works (mature) then why the gaping hole in the center where the art should be? I think it's not naive versus mature utilitarianism, it's that utilitarianism is a mathematical algorithm and simply doesn't work for optimizing human living...it's great for robots. And great for the first pioneering wave of EA blazing a new path...but ulitimately unsustainable for the future.
Eric Hoel does a far better job outlining the poison in utilitarianism that remains no matter how you dilute it or claim it to be naive or mature (but unlike him I am an Effective Altruist).
And of course I agree with you on the "it's hard to tell one religion to be another religion", which I myself said in my reply post. In fact, I have a college degree in exactly that - Christian Ministry with an emphasis in "missions' where you go tell people in foreign countries to abandon their culture and religion and adopt yours...and amazingly, you'd be surprised at how well it works. Any religious group that does proselytizing usually gets decent results. I don't agree with doing that anymore with religion, but it is surprisingly effective...and so I don't mind telling a bunch of utilitarians to stop being utilitarians...on the other hand if I can figure out a different reason for the debilitating lack of art in EA and the anxious mental health issues connected to not saving enough lives guilt, I'll gladly change tactics.
If you compare EA to all those other human endeavors I listed above, what's the point of differentiation? Why do even military organizations have tons of art compared to EA?
You seem to think if art was good for human optimization then consequentialists should have plenty, so why don't they around here?
Thanks for helping me think these things through.